"bowling green kentucky"
3 episodes tagged with this keyword
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Mark Koernke discussed illegal immigration and refugee admissions, citing cases of Iraqi bomb makers admitted as refugees and unaccompanied minors crossing the border. The show featured extended segments on fundraising for the Micro Effect network, including a silver coin drawing on March 14th and appeals for recurring donations. Koernke addressed Connecticut militia monitoring of alleged Mossad operatives, Common Core education concerns, and criticized mainstream media coverage while promoting alternative news sources and preparedness. The episode included commentary on industrial job outsourcing, water contamination issues, and calls for listeners to support the network through contributions and social media sharing.
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Mark Koernke discussed an alleged ATF raid in Bowling Green, Kentucky that callers investigated and found to be potentially fabricated or heavily redacted from public records. The show covered concerns about biological and nuclear threats, analyzed an MSNBC special on ATF operations that appeared incomplete online, discussed gun purchases and ammunition shortages amid Obama's election, reviewed rifle production delays at American manufacturers, and provided detailed advice on acquiring Dragunov rifles and magazines as barter items. The final segment addressed NBC (nuclear, biological, chemical) defense systems for infants and families, with Koernke noting this was a priority project in development.
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Mark Koernke discussed the incoming Obama administration's parallels to FDR's New Deal, criticizing federal overreach, gun control measures, and the outsourcing of defense manufacturing. He covered militia reorganization efforts in Michigan, Virginia, and the Carolinas, including the formation of a Colonial Marines divisional command. Caller Andrew from Ohio reported on an ATF program documenting federal law enforcement operations in Chicago, New Orleans, and Bowling Green, Kentucky, with Koernke analyzing the case of a man who held off 120 federal agents for four days and questioning the federal jurisdiction in what appeared to be a local matter.